The Pentagon is reportedly maneuvering a naval destroyer to the Indian Ocean amid allegations that the missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner may have went down much further west then investigators previously thought.

ABC News reported on Thursday that officials in the
United States say there’s an “indication” that the plane
ended up in the Indian Ocean, and not the South China Sea as
widely assumed.

The aircraft, a Boeing 777, disappeared early Saturday morning
with 236 people onboard around one hour after departing a Kuala
Lumpur airport en route to Beijing. Five days later, officials
have yet to discover any sign of the aircraft or associated
wreckage, nor have they reached any determinations about the
cause of the disappearance.

The USS Kidd, ABC News reported on Thursday, was being rerouted
to the Indian Ocean to begin searching for the missing Flight 370
after officials from the US and no fewer than 11 other countries
had already begun scouring the waters below the plane’s scheduled
flight path for clues.

Reports of a repositioned search area came on the heels of
another claim made by the Wall Street Journal that suggested the plane
may have stayed in the air for four-to-five hours after its
cockpit lost contact with air traffic controllers, indicating
that Flight 370 may have ventured thousands of miles off course
after it ceased communicating if the paper's claim is correct.

Thursday afternoon in Washington, DC, White House press secretary
Jay Carney acknowledged what he said were yet-to-be conclusive
claims about the plane being much further west off course than
initially believed.

“There are a number of possible scenarios that are being
investigated as to what happened to the flight, and we are not in
a position at this point to make conclusions about what happened,
unfortunately,” Carney said.

When questioned about ABC News’ alleged “indication”
regarding the Indian Ocean, Carney said that the White House is
“looking at information, pursuing possible leads [and]
working within the investigation being led by the Malaysian
government, and it is my understanding that one possible piece of
information — or collection of pieces of information — has led to
the possibility that a new area, a search area, may be opened in
the Indian Ocean.”

The US is “Consulting with international partner about the
appropriate actions to deploy,” Carney said, but reiterated
that the investigation is being led by authorities in Malaysia.

"We are making available to Malaysia substantial assets to
assist in the search for that flight so that we can ascertain
what happened to it for the sake of the families who are
suffering even now this many days after the flight
disappeared," Carney said.

According to a report by the Associated Press published on
Thursday, Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said
the nation’s main search efforts remained east of the Malaysian
peninsula, far from the Indian Ocean. At the same time, however,
the AP also reported that Malaysian officials acknowledged
expanding that search into part of the Indian Ocean northwest of
the Strait of Malacca. The AP also said that India planned to
send ships and aircraft to those waters as well.